TRE TR ttawa Winter Fair 1. 19th to 23rd, 1914 i WAY FIRST OLASS FARE FOR ROUND TRIP $3.70 - Tickets good going Jan. 10th to 'dan. 220d, inclusive. _ Good to return on or before Jan. | 'We can make all arrangements to 'Bring your 'family and friends from the Old Country. Special attention will be given them. For full particulars apply te "S.J. P, HANLEY, Railroad and Steamship Agent, Cor. Johnston and Ontario Sts. LIN PACIFIC Winter Fair, Jan. 20 to 23 ONE WAY FIRST CLASS FARE FOR ROUND TRIP $3.70 | Tickets good going Jan. 19 to Jan. 22 Inclusive. Good to return on or be- fore Jan. 24th. C. P, oe Louis Tracy | t Copyright by Malad @ Allen. "Well," agreed Pyne, slowly, "that is the view a friend of mine took of the femark. So he asked the professdr if he had a nice agreeable sort of defi nition, all ready for use, of the way Englishmen clipped their syllables. e other fellow allowed that he had: n't pondered on it. 'I guess,' said my friend, 'it represents the effort of am educated ass to talk English." . Though the laugh was against them they were forced to snigger approval. "I think," said Constance, "that our chief national failing is pomposity, nnd your story hits it off exactly. In one of our small Cornish towns we have a stout little Mayor who made money in cheese'and bacon. He went to see the Paris Exhibition, and an Exeter man, meeting him unexpected- ly at the foot of the Eiffel Tower, hailed him with delight. 'Hello,' Mr. Mayor--" he began. 'Hush,' said the mayor, glancing around mysteriously, 'I'm 'ere incog.'"" None who heard these light-hearted young people yelling with merriment would imagine. that they had just fined off a piece of hard-baked bread made without yeast and washed down with water tasting of tar and turpen- Particulars from ¥, As, City Ticket OM Conway, Cor. elgcons and Wellington Sts, ne 1197. | oomAN sTRAMSHIP AGENCY ©. 8, KIRKPATRICK 42 Clarence St. CUNARD LINE - Phone 56% CANADIAN SERVICER. From Southampton From Portland, Me. Jan. 22 ASCANIA Feb, 7 Feb, 26 ASCANIA Mar, 14 Mar. 5 ALAUNIA Mar, 21 Steamers will call Plymouth east- bound. Rates--Cabin . (11) $46.25 up, 3rd class British eastbound, $30.25 up. Westbound §30 up. THE ROBERT REFORD C0., Limited: General Agent, 50 King St. E., Toronto. Winter Sailings From Bristol 8, R. Edward Feb, 11 of clob of botel. A wiip's matron personally attands women travelling alone, Handsomelv illystrated book. Iets~=write to $2 King St East, Toronts, Ont. '% BERMUDA TRS, "BERMUDIAN," twin screw «tons displacement, = Fork 10 am, February, less: 20 minutes. Steamer landing passengers at the dock in Bermudn without teansfer, 10,518 from New 11, 18, wire- sails 28 January, 4, 25 Submarine signals; orchestra. Record trip 39 hours, Fastest, newest, and oniy \ © West Tadies--New S.8, "GUIANA, and ther steamers from New York at 2 pm, 24 January, 7, 21 February for 8t. Thomas, St. Croix, Kitts, Anti- gua, Guadaloupe, Deominicia, Martin- que, St. Lucia, Barbadoes and Demer- ara, St. For full information * HANLEY, or C. 8. KIRKPATRICK, : Picket Agents, Kingston; ' QUEBEC § STEAMSHIP CO, LTD, Quebec apply. to J. P New YorgFruit Store Sweet Oranges, 15¢, 20¢ and 80c a dozen. Malaga Grapes, 20c a 1b. Bananas, 16c and 20c. a dozen. wb 'Figs, 15¢c a 1b. - Dates, 10c a 1b, 814 Princess St. Phone 1405 For Choice Groceries, Fancy Pickles, Fancy Olives, Cured Meats. 238 Princess St, . Phone 720 Prompt Delivery. Phone 76 For Your Christmas Groceries. | Our stock 1s complete in all | lines . ey tine. "Now, Miss Enid, your turn," cried Pyne. | Her eyes danced mischievously. "Unfortunately, by the accident of irth, I am deprived of the sense of humor," she said. {."It seems to be in the family all right," he hazarded, looking at Con- { "Alas!" said Enid, "I am an Amerk t "p11 smile now, if that is all," sald } "Bat, please, I am not joking a little bit. When you go ashore you wlll probably hear all about me, so I may ms well take the wind out of the sails f gossip: I am a mere waif, who ame sailing in out of the West one day in a little boat which must have kome from the New World as no one ! Appeared to have lost either me or it in the Old. Dad picked us both up and | adopted me." Pyne did not know whether to take her seriously or mot, until he sought jconfirmation in a pair of tranquil | eyes which he gazed into at every op- | portunity. ~~ "It 18 quite true," said Constance | gravely. "I suppbse that the myster- | lous affinity between parents and Jong. lost children , which exists in story- { books is all sonsense in reality. No family gould be more united and de- | voted to each other than we are, yet Eoid is not my sister, and my father is her's only by adoption. He found her half dying, drifting past this very rock, and before he could reach her e fought and killed a dreadful shark. © Are very proud of dad, Mr. Pyne, Kou see, he 18 our only relation. Knid knows neither her father nor mother, snd my mother died when I was a { "Great Scott!" cried Pyne. £YHe turned quickly towards the door. rs. Vansittart, very pale, with eyes hat looked unnaturally large in the faint. light, stood there. ¥or an in- Signt he was startled. He had net seen Mrs. Vansittart since they came to the rock, and he was shocked by the chéhge in her appearance. He did not like her. His alert intelligence distrusted 'her. But it was not his business in life to select a wife for his uncle, as he put it, and he had al- Ways treated her with respectful po- liteness. Now, owing to some fleeting aspect which he vould not account for, some vague resemblance to an- other which he did not remember hav- ing noticed before, he viewed her with a certain expectant curiosity that was equally unintelligible to him. She held out 'a scrap of paper, : "Mr. Traill is here," she said quiet- y. - "Here!" he repeated, wondering what she meant, and perplexed by her icy, self-contained tone, whilst he thought it passing strange that she | had no other greeting for him, "Well," she said, "that is the best word I can find. He is near to us, as near as a steamer can bring him. Mr. Brand has received a signaled message; he wrote it out and sent it 10 me. by a man. I inquired where you were, and was told you were engaged in the kitchen." For some reason Mrs. Vansittart seemed to be greatly perturbed. Her presence put an and to the salety of the place quite effectually. The young man took the paper in silence. He read: "Dear Madam---a signal just received from the Falcon' runs as follows: --'Mr. Cyrus J. Traill is' on board and sends his love to Etta and Charlie. He will make every prepara tion for their comfdrt ashore and trusts they are bearing up well under inevitable hardships' Yours faith. fully, Stephen Brand." | Pyne strode to the door. "I must see if I can't get Mr. Brand to answer the old boy," he cried. "Perhaps you have attended to that al- She did not make way for him to pass. "No," she said. "I came to seek you on that 'account. If not too late, will you tell your uncle that I do not wish | to delay a moment in Penzance. He will please me most by arranging for & special train to await our arrival at the station." ; | «What's the hurry?' he demanded. "A woman's whim, #f you like, but a fixed resolve, nevertheless." "Will you travel in that rig-out?" he asked quizzically. "It is an easy matter to-call at a shop if we reach shore ba, daylight. Then I can purchase a cloak and hat to serve my needs. Otherwise, it is matterless how I am attired, Will Jou do this?™ "Why, certainly. Bbe gave a little gasp of relief. In - instant have Sw » Sel ore | THR DAILY RRITISH gone, put Ena, who nappened to glance through the window which opened towards the northwest, de tained him. = "There's no hurry. now for. sure" she said. "The Falcon is half way to Carn du by this thme. I do not sup- pose she will return until it is too dark to do more than signal important news very briefly." ' "But this is impértant" cried Mrs, Vansittart shrilty. "It 1s of the utmost importance to me." "'Fraid it can't be helped ma'am," said Pyne civilly. "Anyhow 'we're not ashore vet, and 1 can't see that any time will be wasted." The electric bell jangled in the room, causing Mrs. Vansittart to jump visibly. "Oh, what is #t?" she screamed. "My father is calling one of us up," explained Constance. "It may be a message from Jack. You go, Enid." Enid hurried away. She had scarce- ly reached the next floor before Mrs. Vansittart, who seemed to have moods in full compass, sald sweetly: "Convey my deep obligations to Mr. Brand, won't you, Charlie. In- deed, you might go now and write out the text of my message to your uncle. Some early opportunity of despatch: ing it may offer." "All right," he said in the calm WAY feelings. "Shall I escort you to your room?" : "By no means. I came here quite unassisted. Miss Brand and I can chat for a little while. Jt is most wearying to be pent all day and all night in' one little. room. Hven the ghange to another little room if grate- ul." Pyne bowed, and they heard his steady tread as he ascended the stairs, "Quite a nice boy, Charlie," said Mrs. Vansittart, coming forward into the kitchen, with its medley of queer: looking, hissing, steaming contriv- ances. "Yes. We think he is exceedingly nice," sald Constance. She wondered why the other woman seemed always to stand in the shadow, by choice. The strongest light in the darkened chamber came from the grate, and Mrs. Vansittart deliberately turned away from it. "If all goes well he will soon be my nephew by marriage," went on the other. "I quitted New York yesterday week in order to marry his uncle in Paris. Rather a disastrous beginning to a new career, is it not?" "I hofe not, indeed. Perhays you are surmounting difficulties at the commencenient rather than at the end." "It may be. I am so much older than you that I am less optimistic, But you did not grasp the significance of my words. I said I was to be mar ried in Paris." "Yes," said Constance, still at a loss to catch the drift of an announcement which Mrs. Vansittart seemed so anx ious to thrust upon her. "Well, the Chinook was wrecked last night, or rather early this morning. The name of the ship was not made known throughout the world unti] long after daybreak. It is quite im- possible that Mr. Traill should have reached this remote corner of England from Paris in the interval." For one moment the girl was puz zled. Then a ready solution occur red to her. "Oh, of course, that is very simple Mr. Traill was awaiting your arrival in Southampton, thinking to take you by surprise no doubt.. That is sure to be the explanation. What a shock the first telegram must have given him!' "How did he ascertain that his ne phew and ! were alive? "The very first thing father did was to telegraph the names of all the sur vivors. 1 know that is so because 1 saw the message." "Ah. He is a man of method; I sup- pose. You are proud of him, I heard you say." "I think there 1s no one like him in all the world. We are so happy at home that sometimes I fear it cannot last. Yet, thank God, there is no ex- cuse for such night-mare terrors." Mrs. Vansittart cooed in her gentle way. . "Indeed you have my earnest good wishes in that respect," she said. "Do we not owe our lives to you? That is an excellent reason for gratitude, if a selfish one. But, some day soon, you will be getting married and leav- ing the parental roof." ¢ "I do not wish to die an old maid," laughed 'Constance, "yet I have net discovered a better name than my own up to the present." She fancied that Mrs. Vansittart winced a little at this remark. Deem- ing her visitor to be a bundle of nerves she jumped to the conclusion that the other woman read into the words some far-fetched disparagement of her own approaching marriage. "Of course," she continued, affably tactful, "I will hold another view when the right man asks me." "Were you in my place," murmured hér visitor, apparently thinking aloud rather than addressing Constance, "you would not be fearful of misfor- tune? You would not read an omen of ill luck into this dramatic interrup- tion of all your plans? After many years of widowhood I am about to be married again to a man who is admir- able in every way. He is ridh, dis "==nigshed in manner and appearance, 10 CENT "CASCARET'S STRAIGHTEN You up No Sick Headache, Bilicus Stomach, Coated Tongue or Constipated . Bowels hy morning. Get a 10-cent box now. Turn the rascals out--the head- ache, billousness, indigestion, the sick, sour stomach and foul gases-- turn them out to-night and. keep them out with Cascarets. .Milljons of men and women take a Cascaret now and then and never 'know the misery caused by a lazy liver, clogged bowels or an upaet stomach. Don't put in another day of dis. tress. Let Cascarets cleanse your stomach; remove the sour, ferment- ing food; take the excess bile from your liver and carry out all the con- stipated waste matter and poison In the bowels. Then you will feel great. r A Cascaret to-night you out by morning. They work while vou sleep. A' 10-cent how from any drug store means a clear head, sweet stomach and clean, straifhtens healthy liver and bowel action for months. Children love Cascarsts be. which so effectually concealed his | or sicken, o "Tt THURSDAY, JANUARY 22, 1914. b Berion of note not only in the States t on the Continent. No woman of fy years might desire a better match. Why could not the way be made Smooth for me? 'Why should the poor Chinook, out of the hundreds of mail- Steamers which cross the Atlantic yearly be picked out for utter disas- ter? It is a warning--a threat from the gods!" i . The unconscious bitterness of her tone moved the girl to find words of consolation, - ¥ "I would not question the ways of Providence in the least," she said. "Surely you have far more reason for thankfulness than for regret." 4 "Regret! Iam not regretting. But 1 have gone through such trials' that I am unnerved. There, child! For give me for troubling you, And--and --kiss me, will you, and say you wile me well!" . She moved nearer, as it driven by uncontrollable impulse. Constance, not prepared for such an outburst, was nevertheless deeply touched by this appeal for sympathy. : ! "I wish you all the joy and happi« ness which I am sure you deserve," she said, stooping to kiss the wan, shrinking face held up to her. Mrs. Vansittart burst into a parox- ysm of tears and tottered towards the door. A : "No, no," she gasped, as Constance caught her by the arm. "Do not come with me. "1 am--shaken. It will pass. For God's sake, let me go alone!" CHAPTER XIL PREPARATIONS Pyne found Enid rosy-red and in- clined to be tearful. The dying light of day was still strong enough in the service-room -to permit these things to be seen. "No bad news, I hope?" he inquired though the sight of Stephen Brand, seated at his desk and placidly writs ing, was reassuring. The question steadied her to an oxs tent. I "It 18 nothing of any consequence," she said and darted past him. ' Brand looked up from his journal. He smiled, though the American thought there was. a hint of pain in his eyes. "I am going to lose one of my girls," he said. "Oh, no, this is not a loss by death but by marriage. If 1 were a Frenchman, I would describe it as gaining a son. Enid has just received what is tantamount to a proposal." : "By flag-wagging?" Pyne was na- turally astounded. "Yes. You would not expect one of the people from the Chinook to be so enterprising." "l--don"t--know," sald Pyne, punc- tuating each word with a deliberate nod. "Well, in any case, I would not have forwarded the application after an acquaintance of eighteen hours." ob- served . Brand, with equal delibera- tion. "They're two powerful fine girls," said Pyne, steering clear of the point, "They have just been telling me how Miss Enid happened along. It reads like a fairy tale." "She was given to me by the winds and waves, yet she is dear to me As my own child. I shall miss her great- ly--it all goes well here." "I've cottoned on to both of them something wonderful. But, if. I am not ' intruding into private affairs, how comes it that Miss Enid is being telegraphed for? 'Of course I can understand the gentleman being in a hurry. I would feel that way myself if the conditions were favorable." Pyne could be as stolid as a red Indian when the occasion demanded it. Brand found no hint in his face of the hidden thought in his words. "Have they said anything to you of a man named Stanhope?" inquired the lighthouse-keeper, resuming the entry in his diary after a sharp glance up- wards. "Y.yes. They pointed him out to me this morning. In the navy, I think. Fellow with a title, and that sort of thing." "No. His mother is Lady Margaret Stanhope, . being an earl's daughter, but his father was a knight, He has been paying attentions to Enid for a Year and more, to my knowledge and to his mother's exceeding indigna- tion, I fancy." "That i8 where we on the other side have the pull of you." "Have you? 1 wonder. However, Lady Margarét's views have not trou- bled me. I will deal with her when the time comes. At present it looks fairly certain that Master Jack has settled matters on his own account. I may be. mistaken, of course, How do you interpret this?" ja tw ' He closed the journal and handed to Pyne a memorandum taken down letter by Jetter by a sailor as Brand read the signal: "Mother sends her love to Enid." "Did mother ever convey her love to Enid before? asked Pyne. "No. ; . "Then 1 call that neat: I take off my hat to Stanhope. He and mamma have had a heart-to-heart talk." Brand leaned his head on his hands, with clenched fists tovering his ears. There was a period of utter silence un- til the lighthouse-keeper rose to light the lamp. Pyne watched him narrowly. . "I may be trespassing on delicate ground," he said at last. "If I am, you are not the sort of man to sténd on ceremody. In the States, you know when the authorities want to preserve 8 park section they don't say: 'Please do not walk on the grass." They put up a board which reads: 'Keep off, We never kick. We're used to it." "My uotlee-board, if required, will be less curt, at any rate," replied Brand, and they faced each other. Though their words were light; no pleasant conceit lurked in their minds There was a question to be asked and answered, and it held the issues o lite and death, "iy "What did you mean just now by saying, 'if all goes well heré?" Is ther Any special reason why things shoul not go well?" The young Philadelphian might bave been Wazarding an inquiry about & matter of trivial interest, so calm was he, so smooth his utterance. But Brand had made no mistake in esti- mating this youngster's force of char Rcter, nor did he seek to temporize, He extended an arm towards the reef. . ° > "You hear that?" he said. "Yes," "It may boil that way "So I have been told.' "Mr. Emmet Tr. "Ah! He dr > for weeks." .{ himself in t |verther ne, nor any other man in tne place save myself, Brasps the true meaning of the fact." "I've been theorizing," said Pyne "It occurred to me that this light isn' here for amusement." He looked up at the smiled. The pillar, in must have been for Brand, lamp an those days a haunt of fllusicns Hike Constance and Pyn he case of Mrs. Vansittart thought he caught an expression fa miliar to his eyes long before he had 'i8een that clear-cut, splendidly intelli gent face. But there was no time for idle spec- ulation... He glanced into_the well of the stairs to make sure that no one was asoanding. Then he approached nearer to Pyn and said in an intense whisper: * "It is folly to waste words with you I have reasoned this thing out an now I will tell you what I have de cided. 1 will take the watch fron eight until twelve. At twelve vou wil relieve me, and I will 80 below to se cure provisions and water sufficien to maintain the lives of my daughters you and myself, for a few hours long er than the others. By right, if 1 followed the rules I have promised to obey, I ajone should live, That 1s im- possible, A Spartan might do it, but 1 canuot abandon my girls and yet retain my senses. 1 trust you because I must have a confederate. If the weather does not break before to Inorrow night we must barricade the stairs--and fight----if necessary." His face was drawn and haggard his eyes blazing. He shook as one in the first throes of fever. He seemed to await his companions verdict with an over-powering dread lest any at- tempt should be made to question the justice of his decree. "Yes. 1 figured it out that way, " 'said Pyne. "It's queer, isn't it, 'Ito be in such a fix when there's all sorts of help within call, so to speak. We might as well be in a mine closed up by an explosion. And, I'll tell you what--I'm real sorry for you," Brand, collapsing under the strain, sank into a chair. "It is an awful thing," he moaned, "to condemn so many men, women and children, to such a death." A spasm of pain made Pyne's lips tremulous for an instant. He had for- {gotten Elsie and Mamie. But his voice was fully under con trol when he spoke again. "You can count on me in the deal in all but one thing," he said. The older man looked up fiercely. What condition could be imposed in the fulfilment of a duty so terrible? . "I am here by chance," went on Pyne. "One of your daughters may have told you that Mrs. Vansittar came from New York to marry my uncle. Anyhow you would know sh was dear to him by his message to- day. ' She is sort of in my charge, and I can't desert her. It's hard luck. as don't care a cent for her. She's the kind of woman old men adore--fascin- ating, bird-like" creatures--when the cage is gilded." Brand sprang to his feet and raced up to the trimming-stage. When his hands were on the lamp he felt surer of himself. It gave him strength dur- jng the hurricane and it would strengthen him now, ; "There can be no exceptions," he said harshly. Pyne waited until the lighthouse-keeper rejoined him. ' "I ought to have put my proposition before you first and made a speech afterwards," he said. "Constance and Enid will join you here when yau say the word, but I will be on the other side of the barricade." "Nonsense!" cried - Brand. "You 'have no right to thrust away the chance that is given you. You saved all these people once. Why should you die uselessly?" "What! Suppose it pans out that way. Suppose weé-live a couple . of weeks and escape. Am I to face the old man and tell him--the truth? No, sir. You don't mean it. You wouldn' do it yourself. What about that shark the girls told me of. I can guess jus what happened. He wanted the light refreshment in the boat. Did you scoot back when you saw his fin? I'm a heap younger than you, Mr. Brand, but that bluff doesn't go." "Thank Heaven, we have twenty- four hours yet!" murmured Brand. "it will be all the same when we have enly twenty-four seconds. Let us fix it that way right now. Don't you see, it will be easier to deceive the girls? And there's another rea. son. Barricade and shoot as you like 4 will be a hard thing to keep three score desperate men boxsd up down below. When they begin to diet on colza there will be trouble. A few of us, ready to take chances, will be help ful. Some of them may have to die quick, you know." Brand closed his eyes in sheer pifright. In that way he tried to shut out a vision. "Bé it so," he gasped. Lord help us." , It was the responsibility that nias- red him. Judges on the bench often reak down when they sentence a criminal 'to death, but what judge, humane, tender-hearted and God-fear- ing, ever pronounced the doom of Beventy-eight people snatched from a Imercit?l death to be steeped in hor- rors, "May the (To be continued.) The Secret of Good Digestion In perfect health, with regular and healthful action of the liver and kidneys, you need not know there is such a thing as digestion or indiges- tion. Unfortunately, however, mod- era life is artificial, and nét many people avoid sufféring more or less from troubles of this nature. The great secret lies in keeping the liver and kidneys in health and vigor, for then the food is quickly along the alimentary canal, the nutritive portions being assim- {lated in the blood stream and the poisoned waste materials are pass ed out of the body. When the liver and kidneys get wrong you will obtain relief most promptly and effectively by = using Dr. Chase's Kidmey-Liver Pills. If chronic. indigestion is to be cured it Trust be by suliveaing the action of ese filtering and excretory organs. To have thought persons who only TE hE aa asthe oflend- the | ing organ this may seem but any physician. IN PILLS ARE Says Prominent Winnipeg N WINDERS" Man. "Before ewspaper [Used The Second Box, The Pain Had Left" 'Manitoba Free Press" x Winnipeg, Jan, 15th. 191 "I think it only right that I shoul tell you about the benefits I received the last couple of weeks by using GIN PILLS. I was troubled for over three weeks with a pain in my back, and tried a number of remedies without any benefit. One of the reporters had also been troubled the same way and he said to me, "Why don't yon muse GIN PILLS? I used a box and a half and the pain left". He said "You take this other half of the box and get another box, and you will be all right'. Iam glad to inform you that before I used all of the second box, I felt myself all right again and the Jain had left. 1 certainly think GIN PILLS are wonders", J JOHN J. CONKLIN, Day Editor. If you are suffering from any form of Rheumatism, Sciatica, Lumbago, Kid- ney Disease or Bladder Trouble, geta box of GIN PILLS at your dealer's to«day. 50c. a box, 6 for $2.50, and every box sold with our positive guaran of satisfaction or your money ptly refunded. You can try them before you buy them. Sample free will be sent | if you write National & Chemical Co of Canada, Limited, Toronto. 208 KING GEORGE NAVY PLUG CHEWING TOBACCO IS IN A CLASS BY ITSELF: process It Sarpastes all others in quality and flavour because the y which it is made differs from others.--It is deli - ciously sweet and non-irritating. | ROCK CI SOLD EVERYWHERE: 10c A PLUG TY TOBACCO Co., Manufacturers, QUEBEC * THE ORIGINAL AND ONLY GENUINE, The Most Valuable Medicine ever discovered. The best known Remedy for CouGHS, CoLbs, ASTHMA, BRONCHITIS. Apts like 3 charm in DIARRHUEA, DYSENTERY & CHOLERA. Effecteally cuts short al' attacks of STASMS. Checks and arrests (hose (oo ¥o fatal diseases--FEVER, CROUP asd AGUE. The Saly palliative is NEURALGIA, GOUT, RHEUMATISM. 'Chlorodyne is a liguid taken in drops, graduated according to the malady. It invariably relicves #0 bad effec INSIST ON HAVING Dr. J. COLLIS BROWNE'S CHLORODYNE. The immense success of this Remedy has gives rise to many imitations. N.B.--Every bottle of Geavin+ Chloredyse bears on the stamp the names of the iaventor, Dr. J, Collis Browne. pain o; whatever kind ; allays Sreityfion of the mervous system when ts: and can be taken when wo other medicine can be folera creates a calm refreshing sleep ; all other remedies fail: leavys ted. . CONVINCING MEDICAL TESTIMONY WITH EACH BOTTLE. Sold by all Chemists. Prices in England : : ih. 2/9, ae Sole Manufacturers: J. T. DAVENPORT Lid LONDON, SE # Wholesale Agent, Lyman Bros. Oc. Limited, foronle, "== | KEEP YOUR FEET WARM s 'qf We have many cold weather footwear propositions that are sure to keep out the cold and snow. Such articles as felt boots, over- shoes, overgaiters and 'moccasins your feet warm and ill kee comfortable during these %old & BRO. THE HOME OF GQOD SHOES